More On:
The Problematics
-
The Problematics: ‘Cruising’ At 45, A Very Graphic, Radical, And Subversive Way To Spend Your Valentine’s Day
-
The Problematics: ‘Silent Night Deadly Night,’ The Ultimate Bad Santa Picture
-
The Problematics: ‘Body Double’ at 40, Drilling Down On Brian De Palma’s Most Brutal (And Misogynist?) Murderfest
-
The Problematics: Bob Guccione’s ‘Caligula’ Is An Unholy Cinematic Orgy
The 1980 thriller bent the rules in The French Connection. And so on.
The seed for Cruising, a very graphic and ultimately very odd thriller about a serial killer preying on the leather-heavy, S&M-leaning anonymous gay sex scene that was thriving and throbbing on the docks of New York City in the pre-AIDS era, were planted in Friedkin in 1979, when he read a series of Village Voice columns by Arthur Bell about real-life murders in what was then the meatpacking district of Manhattan, where rough trade gay bars and clubs were interspersed between beef coolers. Some years prior, producer Jerry Weintraub had presented Friedkin with Gerald Walker’s novel, to which Weintraub had brought the rights, and Friedkin shrugged him off. After reading Bell’s columns, Friedkin was interested again.
In a not entirely incredible irony, it was Bell who sounded an alarm about the movie just before it started shooting, concerned that it would portray the gay community in a way that would amplify homophobia. Several columns were devoted to protesting the movie and organizing demonstrations at its New York locations.
And the movie’s star, Al Pacino, who plays a cop who goes undercover in the gay subculture to find a serial killer, was disinclined to promote the movie after seeing it. In his his very dishy 2013 memoir The Friedkin Connection, complaining about Pacino’s tardiness and lack of commitment to his role.

The movie is now 45 years old, and thanks to Friedkin’s directorial fluency, it’s as uncomfortable and frightening as it’s ever been. The guy knew how to put together a picture. Hitchcock and Welles were the filmmakers he seemed to treasure above all, and he seemed magically able to use their lessons without overtly revealing their influence. The stalking and killing scenes in Cruising are brutal and punishing, but they also crackle with a dreadful tension; they’re Hitchcockian, but you never stop and point and say “That’s a Hitchcock shot,” or cut, or what have you. It’s just plain exciting filmmaking.
Fun
Frisky
Nostalgic
Intense
Adventurous
Choked Up
Curious
Romantic
Weird
